Although the domestic marijuana industry may generate revenues
as high as $60 billion each year and probably accounts for more
than a fourth of the marijuana consumed in the United States, there
has been no systematic study of the industry or of the people who
cultivate marijuana for profit. This study is the first of its kind
and sets the groundwork for future research on the subject. Ralph
A. Weisheit challenges popular images of the drug industry that
focus primarily on drug production in other countries or on the
plight of inner cities. The focus of this field study relates to
the rural drug scene and involves primarily white middle-aged
males, showing how the United States drug problem is deeply
ingrained in the structure of our society. The study also analyzes
the views of marijuana growers and their economic rewards.
Weisheit outlines the history of marijuana, laws covering
marijuana cultivation, and the botany of marijuana growing. Using
interviews with growers, police, and others familiar with marijuana
growing, this study describes a series of new findings about the
types of growers, their motivations, their operations, and their
status in their communities. Further topics covered are the more
sophisticated cultivation techniques developed during the 1980s,
and the controversial issue of the relationship between marijuana
cultivation and other drug use. The interviews and the typology of
growers should be of considerable interest to students and experts
in drugs, criminology, and deviance, as well as to marijuana
growers, police departments, and defense attorneys.
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